{"title":"Practicing sustainability in operations and supply Chain management","authors":"Morgane M. C. Fritz, M. Silva, A. Touboulic","doi":"10.1080/16258312.2022.2138160","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Over the last decades, the exploration of sustainability in the context of operations and supply chain management (O&SCM) has become a significant field of research (Touboulic and Walker, 2015). This undoubtedly stems from the fact that the global organising of business operations is responsible for much of the environmental degradation and social exploitation that is witnessed in the world. Yet much of the research to date is still very much rooted in an observation-led paradigm and the field has primarily adopted a narrow focus on sustainability following an instrumental logic (Matthews et al. 2016; Montabon, Pagell, and Wu 2016; Gold and Schleper 2017; Silva, Fritz, and El-Garaihy 2022a), which overshadow the diversity of different possibilities to advance the practice of sustainability and drive lasting change. Practicing sustainability in supply chains (SCs) exceeds focus on a goal itself to consider how actors are performing and learning actions over time as a practice (Silva and Figueiredo 2020). This requires engagement with the reality in which these actors work and interact, and a thorough understanding of the specific and broader contextual dynamics in which they are embedded (Touboulic, McCarthy, and Matthews 2020). Developing sustainability as a practice is about understanding habitus of agents, which considers not only those aspects that are known but also requires defining emerging elements and meanings in order to drive action. It is important to highlight that this reality is changing over time and expectations on how to practice sustainability in SCs are influenced by some important trends in the broader context, such as political aspects or emerging international frameworks, such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by the United Nations (Fritz and Silva 2018; Fritz 2019). This Special Issue (SI) on practicing sustainability in O&SCM aimed at highlighting a diversity of approaches that not only show the importance of a practice-based perspective but also demonstrate empirically how to practice sustainability in SCs, including how change can be fostered at various levels, and what roles stakeholders may play within and outside the SC. The call for this SI was launched in 2021 in parallel with the 8 International EurOMA Sustainable Operations and Supply Chain Forum conference organised at Excelia Business School, La Rochelle, France. The topic of the conference was ‘Practicing Sustainability in Operations & Supply Chain Management’, which was stimulated by a wish to move the field forward and specify what constitutes a sustainability practice and how to implement sustainability practices along the SC.","PeriodicalId":22004,"journal":{"name":"Supply Chain Forum: An International Journal","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Supply Chain Forum: An International Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/16258312.2022.2138160","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
Over the last decades, the exploration of sustainability in the context of operations and supply chain management (O&SCM) has become a significant field of research (Touboulic and Walker, 2015). This undoubtedly stems from the fact that the global organising of business operations is responsible for much of the environmental degradation and social exploitation that is witnessed in the world. Yet much of the research to date is still very much rooted in an observation-led paradigm and the field has primarily adopted a narrow focus on sustainability following an instrumental logic (Matthews et al. 2016; Montabon, Pagell, and Wu 2016; Gold and Schleper 2017; Silva, Fritz, and El-Garaihy 2022a), which overshadow the diversity of different possibilities to advance the practice of sustainability and drive lasting change. Practicing sustainability in supply chains (SCs) exceeds focus on a goal itself to consider how actors are performing and learning actions over time as a practice (Silva and Figueiredo 2020). This requires engagement with the reality in which these actors work and interact, and a thorough understanding of the specific and broader contextual dynamics in which they are embedded (Touboulic, McCarthy, and Matthews 2020). Developing sustainability as a practice is about understanding habitus of agents, which considers not only those aspects that are known but also requires defining emerging elements and meanings in order to drive action. It is important to highlight that this reality is changing over time and expectations on how to practice sustainability in SCs are influenced by some important trends in the broader context, such as political aspects or emerging international frameworks, such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by the United Nations (Fritz and Silva 2018; Fritz 2019). This Special Issue (SI) on practicing sustainability in O&SCM aimed at highlighting a diversity of approaches that not only show the importance of a practice-based perspective but also demonstrate empirically how to practice sustainability in SCs, including how change can be fostered at various levels, and what roles stakeholders may play within and outside the SC. The call for this SI was launched in 2021 in parallel with the 8 International EurOMA Sustainable Operations and Supply Chain Forum conference organised at Excelia Business School, La Rochelle, France. The topic of the conference was ‘Practicing Sustainability in Operations & Supply Chain Management’, which was stimulated by a wish to move the field forward and specify what constitutes a sustainability practice and how to implement sustainability practices along the SC.
在过去的几十年里,在运营和供应链管理(O&SCM)的背景下探索可持续性已经成为一个重要的研究领域(Touboulic和Walker, 2015)。毫无疑问,这源于这样一个事实,即全球商业运作的组织对世界上可见的环境退化和社会剥削负有很大责任。然而,迄今为止的大部分研究仍然植根于以观察为主导的范式,该领域主要采用了工具逻辑(Matthews et al. 2016;Montabon, Pagell, and Wu 2016;Gold and Schleper 2017;Silva, Fritz, and El-Garaihy 2022a),这掩盖了推进可持续性实践和推动持久变革的不同可能性的多样性。在供应链中实践可持续性超越了对目标本身的关注,而是将参与者如何在一段时间内执行和学习行动作为一种实践(Silva和Figueiredo 2020)。这需要参与到这些参与者工作和互动的现实中,并透彻理解他们所处的具体和更广泛的背景动态(Touboulic, McCarthy, and Matthews, 2020)。将可持续发展作为一种实践是关于理解代理人的习惯,它不仅考虑那些已知的方面,还需要定义新出现的元素和意义,以推动行动。需要强调的是,这一现实正在随着时间的推移而发生变化,对如何在SCs中实践可持续性的期望受到更广泛背景下一些重要趋势的影响,例如政治方面或新兴国际框架,例如联合国的可持续发展目标(sdg) (Fritz and Silva 2018;弗里茨·2019)。本期关于在营运及供应链管理中实践可持续发展的特刊旨在强调各种方法,这些方法不仅显示了以实践为基础的观点的重要性,而且还展示了如何在营运及供应链管理中实践可持续发展,包括如何在各个层面促进变革。以及利益相关者在SC内外可能扮演的角色。2021年,在法国拉罗谢尔Excelia商学院举办的第八届国际EurOMA可持续运营和供应链论坛会议上,发起了这一SI的呼吁。会议的主题是“在运营和供应链管理中实践可持续发展”,会议的目的是希望推动这一领域的发展,并具体说明什么是可持续发展实践,以及如何在供应链上实施可持续发展实践。